![]() $16.06 an hour
Applicants must have a valid state driver’s license, a safe driving record, and at least two years of. Please ensure you can receive email messages from our…
USPSÂ -Â
$12 an hour
Have a valid email address to apply as communication regarding employment opportunities, examinations, interviews and….
USPSÂ -Â
$19.42 an hour
To use hands to fingers, handle, or feel objects, tools. Whether it’s in our Parsippany,. In manufacturing concepts and safety practices and….
Â
$12 an hour
Enforcing state laws and jail policies – Writing reports, Giving verbal directives, Using physical force when required….
Easily apply
Â
$3,000 a month
Troverco , formerly known as Landshire, is a food distribution company servicing customers through direct store delivery. We are passionate about providing
Easily apply
Â
$10 an hour
Applicants must be at least 21 years of age, have a HSD or GED/HSE, have a valid drivers license, be able to become CPR/First Aid certified, and pass extensive…
Easily apply
Â
Leads own learning. An equal opportunity employer, we do not discriminate in hiring or terms and conditions of employment because of an individual’s race, color…
L Brands -Â
An equal opportunity employer, we do not discriminate in hiring or terms and conditions of employment because of an individual’s race, color, religion, gender,…
L Brands –
Including receiving, stocking, issuing, inventory accuracy, cycle counting, client interface, and computer transaction entry….
Â
$10 an hour
Call Center and Sales Representative. Must have computer skills, phone experience and great customer service. Hours are M-F 8-330pm $10.00/hour plus
Easily apply
Â
![]() ![]() Leads own learning. An equal opportunity employer, we do not discriminate in hiring or terms and conditions of employment because of an individual’s race, color…
L Brands -Â
Assists customers entering the store with return merchandise and marks items prior to directing customers to service desk….
Â
$12 an hour
Including receiving, stocking, issuing, inventory accuracy, cycle counting, client interface, and computer transaction entry….
Easily apply
Â
$10 an hour
Pass a State licensing test if driving a company-owned or client-provided vehicle. Must be at least 18 years old or the minimum age required by the state, if…
Â
Maintains a current and valid driver’s license and insures personal automobile insurance is in force and will be maintained, in at least the amounts required by…
Â
$7.91 an hour
Ability to operate standard office equipment, e.g., computer (word processing and data entry), typewriter, telephone, calculator, and copy machines….
Â
Offer a fast, fun and friendly guest experience. Target merchandise discount. Deliver a great-looking, fully-stocked sales floor….
$55,700 a year
Our part-time careers allow you the time to manage your schedule including days that you designate as your own each week!…
Â
From the date of entry into the CVS/pharmacy Retail Management Development program as an SMIT, it may be possible to progress to a Store Manager position within…
Â
Qualified applicants must have a valid Class A Commercial Drivers’ License with Haz-Mat and Twin Trailer endorsements, issued by this state….
UPSÂ -Â
![]() ![]() The Field Technician is an experienced role supporting our Field Services Group in performing installation, troubleshooting, repair and preventative maintenance…
American Wind Energy Association -Â
Models, enforces, and provides direction and guidance to hourly Associates on proper Customer service approaches and techniques to ensure Customer needs,…
Â
Leads own learning. Delivers a friendly and efficient cash wrap experience, processing customer transactions accurately andefficiently at the Point of Sale (POS…
L Brands -Â
Must be able to understand codes and instructions on the computer and have basic computer skills and ability to perform data entry….
Â
Educate guests on REDcard benefits and all the ways the guest can save, pay and shop through digital tools and services….
Target Corporation -Â
Develop databases for safety inspections, self-assessments, and incident. The PSM coordinator will ensure company compliance by developing and implementing…
Â
Drive time and mileage are not covered. Direct Job URL:. We are always looking for talented merchandisers that are interested in joining our nationwide network….
An equal opportunity employer, we do not discriminate in hiring or terms and conditions of employment because of an individual’s race, color, religion, gender,…
L Brands -Â
An equal opportunity employer, we do not discriminate in hiring or terms and conditions of employment because of an individual’s race, color, religion, gender,…
L Brands -Â
Looking for help in our embroidery dept. Prefer experienced, embroidery machine operator or assistant Hooping, trimming & boxing several jobs per day Job Type…
Easily apply
![]() ![]() |
Hot Jobs in Evansville
Adopt A Pet
Precious is a 1 ½-yr-old female Dalmatian mix. She is sweet, gentle, and shy. Her Cardio for Canines partners say she walks very easily on a leash. Precious did well with the kids & other dogs in her previous home. Her $100 adoption fee includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Call (812) 426-2563 or visit www.vhslifesaver.org for adoption details!
Â
USI Volleyball falls to Quincy in three sets
 QUINCY, Ill.—University of Southern Indiana Volleyball could not bounce back from seeing a late four-point lead slip away in the opening set as it fell to host Quincy University, 25-23, 25-23, 25-16, in a Great Lakes Valley Conference match Saturday afternoon.
The Screaming Eagles (6-7, 1-3 GLVC) led 18-14 late in the first set, but a 6-2 Quincy run tied the frame at 20-20. USI led 22-21 moments later, but a 3-0 Quincy run proved to be the back-breaker as the Eagles suffered the two-point loss.
In the second stanza, it was the Eagles that found themselves playing catch-up from the outset as the Lady Hawks built a commanding 17-9 advantage midway through the frame. USI trailed 24-19 later in the frame before fighting off four consecutive set-point opportunities to pull within a single tally.
Following a Quincy timeout, though, the Hawks (8-5, 3-1 GLVC) received a timely kill from Bekah Raebel to quell the Eagles’ surge and build a commanding two-set lead in the match.
Quincy (8-5, 3-1 GLVC) used runs of 3-0 and 5-0 to pull away from the Eagles in the third frame and end the match in three sets.
Freshman outside hitter Mikaila Humphrey (Floyd Knobs, Indiana) had 13 kills to lead the Eagles, offensively, while junior middle hitter Te’Ayla Whitfield (Fort Wayne, Indiana) finished with five blocks.
Junior libero Shannon Farrell (Munster, Indiana) added 22 digs, while sophomore defensive specialist Haley Limper (Springfield, Illinois) and junior outside hitter Shelbi Morris (Brazil, Indiana) finished with 14 and 11 digs, respectively.
USI returns to action Friday at 7 p.m. when it hosts defending GLVC East Division champion McKendree University at the Physical Activities Center. The Eagles play their next six contests at the PAC before traveling to Aurora, Illinois, to take part in the Midwest Region Crossover.
Short Box Score (Match)
Univ. of Southern Indiana Volleyball
Southern Indiana vs Quincy (Sep 24, 2016 at Quincy, IL)
Quincy def. Southern Indiana 25-23,25-23,25-16
Southern Indiana (6-7, 1-3 GLVC)
(Kills-aces-blocks) – Humphrey, Mikaila 13-0-0; Morris, Shelbi 9-0-2; Zwissler, Amy 5-0-3; Jung, Amanda 4-0-1; Whitfield, Te’Ayla 2-0-5; Shoultz, Quin 1-0-1; Peoples, Erika 1-0-0; Limper, Haley 0-1-0; Farrell, Shannon 0-1-0; Totals 35-2-10.0. (Assists) – Shoultz, Quin 15; Peoples, Erika 14. (Dig leaders) – Farrell, Shannon 22; Limper, Haley 14; Morris, Shelbi 11
Quincy (8-5, 3-1 GLVC)
(Kills-aces-blocks) – McMonagle, Taylor 11-0-1; Raebel, Bekah 11-0-1; Lindemulder, Emily 9-0-2; Licurgo, Jessica 8-4-0; Eastman, Bobbie 5-0-1; Rathbun, Sara 3-0-0; Rodriguez, Miranda 1-0-0; Wicinski, Jessica 1-0-1; Totals 49-4-4.0. (Assists) – Rathbun, Sara 29. (Dig leaders) – Shores, Rachel 25; Wicinski, Jessica 11; Rathbun, Sara 8
Site: Quincy, IL (Pepsi Arena)
Date: Sep 24, 2016Â Â Attend: 110Â Â Time: 1:31
Referees: Greg Ramey, Lonnie Rinell
2016 ELECTION: CRASH, BURN AND REPEAT
Raging Moderate by Will Durst
We might as well be watching a 30-car pile-up the way Americans are holding hands over their eyes trying to avoid the grisly bits of the most grotesque presidential race we have witnessed in this, the second decade of the 21st Century. Of course, it’s only the 2nd election during that time, but still.
That is not to say 2012 wasn’t genuinely gruesome, with more than its share of cataclysmic collisions and demolition derby debacles, but this time they’re headed downhill faster than an 18-wheeler with burned out brakes carrying a load of nitroglycerine on the western slope of the Andes.
This is a race to rock bottom to see which team ends up least wrecked, and right now they’re both jostling for pole position. Everybody is losing paint riding into each other while running over rocky roads gouged by their own staffs. Must be why they call them pit crews.
You’ve heard the term “Accidents waiting to happen?†Well the opposite is “accidents waiting for a break in the action.†The two most polarizing drivers in the history of American politics have veered into so many walls, both their nicknames could be Crash.
Recently the Donald and the Hillary pulled into the paddock to attack their opponent’s foreign policies, a shock to the majority of spectators who were unaware either had a foreign policy that didn’t consist on calling in air strikes on the other’s campaign. And tire irons swung at their fuel lines.
Now we’re getting to the point in this short track race where driver fatigue kicks in, and the unforced errors have begun to accumulate. Hillary Clinton said she was wrong to call half of Trump’s supporters a basket of deplorables. And she was wrong. It’s more like 63 percent.
Donald Trump used the Mexican president as a prop, then gave an immigration speech that spurred most of his Hispanic advisory board to resign. Although to be honest, Trump Hispanic Advisory Board sounds like Democratic Leadership Council. Trump also praised Vladimir Putin for being a strong leader with an 84 percent approval rating. It would be higher, but the KGB hasn’t been able to track down the other 16 percent. Yet.
Even the Libertarian candidate, Gary Johnson, got in trouble for not knowing what Aleppo was. Presumably he was thinking a small leopard or someone suffering from the initial stages of Hansen’s Disease.
Time is running out for all the major candidates to grab some clean air. Hillary needs to prove she’s not a robotic automaton who will do or say anything to get elected. And she intends to do that as soon as she installs a larger hard drive and updates her operating system. Pneumonia, right.
Trump knows he needs to assure the electorate he’s more than some spoiled rich guy whose diplomatic horsepower is measured in arrogant smirks; he’s even gone so far as to hire a female campaign manager to smirk for him.
The good news is the finish line is only two months away. The bad news is one of these lug nuts is going to take the checkered flag. The upside being, on November 8th, our long national nightmare will be over. Until November 9th, when the funny car race for 2020 begins. Gentlemen and ladies, prepare to start your engines.
Indiana Tech Law School dean says 5 graduates appealing bar results
Marilyn Odendahl for www.theindianalawyer.com
Five graduates of Indiana Tech Law School have filed appeals with the Indiana Board of Law Examiners to have their bar exams reviewed, according to the law school’s dean Charles Cercone.
The Fort Wayne law school had only one graduate of its charter classpass the July 2016 Indiana Bar Exam. However since the results were announced, the school has maintained the pass rate could not be determined until the appeals process has been completed.
Cercone, speaking publically for the first time since the bar exam results were announced, said he is confident the law school will turn the results around. The school is offering a “very expensive re-taker program†to the graduates free of charge and is offering other bar prep and doctrinal courses to the graduates and the current third-year students.
“If they do what we tell them to do, they’ll pass,†Cercone said.
At the start of classes in August, Indiana Tech Law School welcomed its largest class ever with 55 new students. Cercone said the law school had a meeting with the student body about the bar results and the students are supportive and committed to working together.
“This is more of a media story than reality because all of them recognize that 12 students is not any kind of representation of our program,†the dean said, referring to the total number of graduates who sat for the July exam.
Cercone was angry about the attention the law school has received since the results were publicized Sept. 12. He said the graduates have been put under a level of scrutiny that graduates of other Indiana law schools have not had to face.
“I understand it’s your job and the media’s job to make law schools look bad, but you overlooked in your zeal to make us look bad that you hurt young men and women trying to take the bar,†Cercone said. “Now these people will be branded for the rest of their careers.â€
Cercone said the law school has shared a number of facts internally with the university as to the reasons for the disappointing bar results. He declined to share the details of that memorandum, saying enough damage had been done to the graduates’ reputations.
Going forward, the dean said he is not worried about Indiana Tech Law School’s provisional accreditation, which was granted by the American Bar Association in March 2016. Both he and Barry A. Currier, managing director of the ABA Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar, said the ABA has not been in contact with the school about the bar passage rate.
“I don’t think the ABA would take any action based on one test with 12 students,†Cercone said.
Currier declined to answer whether the dismal passage rate could put the school’s provisional accreditation in jeopardy. Currier said the Council and Accreditation Committee may review a provisionally approved law school’s ongoing efforts to meet compliance standards. But, he noted, that is a confidential process and he declined to speculate about or have any public comment on the matter.
Retired Indiana Chief Justice Randall Shepard, who led a national examination of law schools as chair of the ABA Task Force on the Future of Legal Education, pointed out the 12 graduates who took the bar was a very small sample and Indiana Tech is just starting to graduate law students.
Still the law school has work to do.
“This number will have to improve a lot if they are going to achieve permanent accreditation,†Shepard said, noting the ABA is considering a rule change that would require law schools to post at least a 75 percent bar passage rate. “Ultimately they will need to achieve a lot better performance to say accredited.â€
Aces volleyball puts forth valiant effort in 3-2 loss
Aces drop hard-fought match
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Montana Schafer had the best outing of her career, posting 11 kills, but Drake was able to hang on in the end, earning a 3-2 win over the University of Evansville volleyball team at the Carson Center on Friday evening.
Schafer was one of four Purple Aces (4-10, 0-1 MVC) in double figures in kills. Rocio Fortuny set her career mark with 17 while Mildrelis Rodriguez finished with 16. Rachel Tam had a solid night, notching 13 kills. On the defensive side, the Aces were stellar as five finished in double digits in digs. Olivia Goldstein set her career mark for the second weekend in a row, posting 22. Rodriguez notching 19, Tam had 18, Fortuny checked in with 13 and Jelena Merseli notched 10. Merseli also tied her career high with 48 assists.
Pacing Drake (10-5, 1-0 MVC) was Kyla Inderski, who had 19 kills. Grace Schofield finished the night with 13.
Evansville was on fire to start the night, taking a 4-0 lead in the first set. Drake got within one at 7-6, but UE held strong, extending its advantage to 17-13. Rachel Tam had a service ace in the run. The Bulldogs kept fighting and took their first lead of the night at 18-17 on a Grace Schofield kill, but the Aces held strong, going back up 20-19 before a Fortuny kill gave them a 24-22 lead. Just when it seemed like the Aces were on the verge of a win, Drake had one more rally left as a kill from Kyla Inderski sent DU on a set-ending 4-0 run and a 26-24 triumph.
The Aces refused to let the loss in the opening frame phase them, showing great maturity in rally for a 25-19 win. Drake had the upper hand early on, taking a 9-5 advantage, but Evansville kept it close. Trailing 17-15, UE turned it on. Another Tam kill began a stretch that saw UE outscore Drake by a 10-2 stretch to earn the win. Tam was the star the second game, notching five kills while hitting .444.
Another close battle ensued in the third game. The Aces seemed to be in good shape as a Fortuny kill gave them a 16-13 lead, but Drake battled back. An 11-3 run saw the Bulldogs looking good, up 24-19, and having a chance to take a 2-1 lead. Rachel Tam and the Aces had other ideas. Tam did the serving as UE finished the set on an unbelievable 7-0 run to grab a 2-1 lead of its own. Fortuny had two kills in the run and Cathy Schreiber added another as the Aces made the improbable comeback.
Drake put its best foot forward in the fourth game, earning a 25-16 win to force a deciding 5th set. Evansville jumped out to a 3-1 lead and extended it to 8-5 before Drake scored four in a row to go up 9-8. Fortuny put UE back on top, recording her 17th kill of the night to make it an 11-10 game. The Bulldogs countered with a run of their own, hanging on for the 15-13 win to clinch the match.
Tomorrow night, the Aces are right back in action against UNI. Game time is 7 p.m. inside the Carson Center.
Farrell notches 1,000th dig, but Eagles fall to Truman
On a night in which junior libero Shannon Farrell (Munster, Indiana) became the 11th player in program history to reach the 1,000-career dig plateau, University of Southern Indiana Volleyball could not rally from a two-set deficit as it fell to host Truman State University 25-22, 25-13, 18-25, 25-18, in a Great Lakes Valley Conference bout Friday night.
After seeing an early five-point lead evaporate in the first set and suffering through a dismal showing in the second frame, the Screaming Eagles bounced back with a big effort in the third stanza to cut their match deficit in half.
USI (6-6, 1-2 GLVC), which hit .412 in the third frame, raced out to an early five-point lead and never let the Bulldogs back into the set.
Truman (3-9, 2-1 GLVC), however, rallied from an early 3-0 deficit in the fourth frame to build a 12-9 advantage. The Bulldogs extended their lead to 15-10 moments later and never looked back as USI could get no closer to than three points throughout the remainder of the set.
Farrell, who now has 1,016 career digs to her name, finished the night with 22 digs, including eight in the opening set and nine in the fourth. Sophomore defensive specialist Haley Limper (Springfield, Illinois) and junior outside hitter Shelbi Morris (Brazil, Indiana) each had 14 digs, while sophomore setter Erika Peoples (Bloomington, Illinois) had a double-double with 37 assists and 11 digs.
Junior middle hitter Te’Ayla Whitfield (Fort Wayne, Indiana) had 11 kills and a .625 attacking percentage to pace the Eagles, offensively. Morris was one of four Eagles to finish with eight kills on the night.
USI returns to action Saturday at 3 p.m. when it travels to Quincy, Illinois, to take on Quincy University. The Lady Hawks (7-5, 2-1 GLVC) defeated Bellarmine University in four sets Friday night.
Short Box Score (Match)
Univ. of Southern Indiana Volleyball
Southern Indiana vs Truman State (Sep 23, 2016 at Kirksville, MO)
Truman State def. Southern Indiana 25-22,25-13,18-25,25-18
Southern Indiana (6-6, 1-2 GLVC)
(Kills-aces-blocks) – Whitfield, Te’Ayla 11-0-1; Zwissler, Amy 8-0-1; Jung, Amanda 8-0-0; Morris, Shelbi 8-2-0; Humphrey, Mikaila 8-0-0; Peoples, Erika 1-0-1; Totals 44-2-3.0. (Assists) – Peoples, Erika 37. (Dig leaders) – Farrell, Shannon 22; Morris, Shelbi 14; Limper, Haley 14; Peoples, Erika 11
Truman State (3-9, 2-1 GLVC)
(Kills-aces-blocks) – Viviano, Claire 14-0-2; Bastian, Kayla 14-1-0; Hildebrand, Holly 6-0-4; O’Drobinak, Bailey 6-2-1; Hill, Lacey 6-0-4; Hughes, Savvy 5-0-0; Livingston, Jocelynn 1-1-0; Berthold, Emma 0-0-1; Callaway, Liv 0-1-0; Wacker, Lauren 0-2-0; Totals 52-7-10.0. (Assists) – Hughes, Savvy 43. (Dig leaders) – Bastian, Kayla 21; Wacker, Lauren 14; Hughes, Savvy 13; Livingston, Jocelynn 9
Site: Kirksville, MO (Pershing Arena)
Date: Sep 23, 2016Â Â Attend: 110Â Â Time: 1:55
Referees: Bruce Huddleson, Robert Fessler
Eagles’ 4th-straight win saved by Zehme
University of Southern Indiana men’s soccer junior goalkeeper Adam Zehme (Orland Park, Illinois) stopped a University of Wisconsin-Parkside penalty kick with 1:11 remaining to preserve a 3-2 Screaming Eagles’ victory Friday night at Strassweg Field. USI, which has won four-straight, watched its record rise to 6-1-0 overall and 4-1-0 in the GLVC, while UW-Parkside falls to 2-4-1, 0-4-1 GLVC.
At 6-1-0 overall to start the year, the Screaming Eagles are off to their best start since 1986 when USI began the year, 5-1-2. The Eagles best start in the history of the program came in 1982 when they were 6-0-2 through eight games.
Zehme capped off his sixth win of the year with six saves, the final coming on a penalty kick at 88:49 after the Eagles were called for a foul in the box. The sixth win of the year also tied a career-high for Zehme.
It was the Rangers who struck first in the match with a goal at 28:12 and would hold the 1-0 lead until the last five minutes of the opening half. USI senior defender Michael Sass (New Palestine, Indiana) evened the match, 1-1, with his first goal of the year at 43:17.
Sass scored on a throw in from freshman midfielder Sean Rickey (Columbia, Illinois), heading the ball into the bottom left corner of the Rangers’ goal.
In the second half, USI took command with 30 minutes to play in the match by scoring a pair of goals in a span of five minutes. Junior midfielder Kyle Richardville (Vincennes, Indiana) gave USI a 2-1 lead at 60:37 when he put away the rebound of a shot by freshman forward Eric Ramirez (Vincennes, Indiana). The goal was Richardville’s second of the year.
Rickey extended the Eagles’ advantage to 3-1 with the eventual game-winning goal at 65:04. Freshman midfielder Adam Becker (Columbia, Illinois) and junior defender Jacob Dickerson (Louisville, Kentucky) assisted on Rickey’s third tally of the season.
The Rangers would make a game of it, closing the gap to 3-2 with a goal at 74:49. The USI defense would clamp down for the final 15 minutes, allowing UW-Parkside only two more shots at the Eagles’ goal, including the penalty kick.
USI concludes the GLVC home weekend Sunday at 2:30 p.m. when it hosts Lewis University. Lewis saw its record go to 1-6-0 overall, 0-5-0 GLVC, after losing in double overtime at Bellarmine University this evening, 1-0.
The Eagles trail the Flyers in the all-time series, 22-21-1, and hope to even the series on Sunday. USI, currently, has the momentum in the series, winning three of the last four.