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USI Women’s Runners Continue To Climb in Polls

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University of Southern Indiana Women’s Cross Country improved to sixth in the U.S. Track and Field & Cross County Coaches Association national poll, while the men fell to 13th.
A second place showing at the Spartan Invite in East Lansing, Michigan propelled the Screaming Eagles over Hillsdale University who finished third in East Lansing. USI also jumped Western Washington University.

Two runners placed in the top three of NCAA Division II runners. Junior Emily Roberts (Fredericktown, Ohio) and senior Jessica Reeves (Midland, Michigan) finished second and third with times of 21 minutes, 16 seconds and 21:36, respectively.

Lewis University joins USI as Great Lakes Valley Conference members in the top-25. The Flyers have the 23rd spot in the poll, while the University of Wisconsin-Parkside is receiving votes.

The Eagles also improved to third in the Midwest Region poll, jumping Hillsdale. Grand Valley State University continues to hold the top spot in the regional and national polls.

On the men’s side, USI fell to 13th in the national poll after being defeated by Hillsdale and Grand Valley at the Spartan Invite. Four Eagles placed in the top-50 including senior Chase Broughton (Marengo, Indiana) junior Bastian Grau (Höchstadt, Germany) at 28th and 32nd, respectively.

Bellarmine University moved into the top-25 for the first time for the first time in 2016, while Parkside and Lewis are receiving votes.

A strong showing at the Spartan Invite by the Hillsdale men dropped USI to third in the Midwest Region poll.

 

 

 

St. Mary’s Hospital for Women & Children Birth Records

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Cathy and Terry Matthews, Evansville, son, Dalton Lee, Sep. 10

Gretchen and William Baumgart, Mount Vernon, Ind., daughter, Magdalena Katherine, Sep. 12

Amy and Clifford Whitehead, Newburgh, Ind., son, Colin Daniel, Sep. 12

Michelle Yates and Nicholas Travelstead, Norris City, Ill., sons, Tanner Aaron and Austin Nicholas, Sep. 12

Samantha Mosby and Michael Allen, Evansville, son, Brayden Michael Lee, Sep. 12

Emily and Greg Gardner, Haubstadt, Ind., son, Grady O’Neal, Sep. 13

Shyla and Joshua Adler, Haubstadt, Ind., son, Liam Joseph, Sep. 13

Julia and Brandon Cox, Mount Vernon, Ind., son, Camden Louis, Sep. 13

Christina Miller and David Helfert, Mount Vernon, Ind., daughter, Trinity Rae, Sep. 13

Amber Smith and Richard Holland, Oakland City, Ind., son, Hendrix Haze, Sep. 13

Jamie and Roger Adkins, Princeton, Ind., daughter, Channing Josephine, Sep. 14

Elizabeth Oran , Evansville, daughter, Nevaeh Joy Marie, and son, Alexander Thomas, Sep. 14

Leeanna and Tyler Adkins, Lewisport, Ky., son, Mason Stephen Lee, Sep. 14

Jaclyn Bechtel and Edward Ferguson, Elnora, Ind., daughter, Abriella Lucille, Sep. 14

Amanda and Chris White, Evansville, daughter, Kaylee Robin, Sep. 15

Nikki and Dustin Priestly, Fort Branch, Ind., son, Kyron David, Sep. 15

Naydean and Larry Cox III, Carmi, Ill., daughter, Mackenzie Renae, Sep. 15

Emily and Bryan Moorhead, Evansville, son, Grant Alan, Sep. 15

Jessica and Louis Volz, Mount Vernon, Ind., son, Leo Joseph, Sep. 16

Joanna and Christopher Wagner, Princeton, Ind., daughter, Kinley Rae, Sep. 16

Susan and Michael Swope, Evansville, daughter, Ava Ruth, Sep. 16

Cassidy and James Brown, Waverly, Ky., daughter, Hazel Grace, Sep. 16

Breanna Buell, Evansville, daughter, Amira Grace, Sep. 16

Adopt A Pet

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Always adopt, don’t shop – even when it comes to pocket pets! Mickey Mouse and his brother Stuart Little are only about 3 months old. They have their whole lives ahead of them. Adopt one for $5 or both for $10! Gently-used small pet supplies are available for purchase in the VHS front lobby. Stop by Tuesday-Saturday 12-6 to inquire!

Halloween Movie Night

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Willard Library
Click anywhere on the flyer above for more information or to reserve your seat!
A History of Local High School Football
September 22, 2016
630-8:0pm
Click on the image above for more details.
Freedom Tea
September 24, 2016
1:00-4:00pm
Click on the image above for more details

I-69 Bonds Downgraded to “Junk” Status by Joshua Claybourn

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I-69 Bonds Downgraded to “Junk” Status by Joshua Claybourn

Citing construction delays and slow payments to subcontractors, Fitch Ratings has downgraded the bonds issued to finance the construction of Interstate 69 between Bloomington and Martinsville. An Aug. 5th report from the bond ratings service expresses doubt that the section of I-69 will be complete by its deadline in June 2017. Fitch lowered its rating from a BBB- to a BB, which technically means it is in “junk bond” status. According to Fitch’s rating scale, the move drops the bonds into the “speculative” category, with “an elevated vulnerability to default risk” for investors who hold those bonds.

This marks the second time Fitch has downgraded the bonds. In April, the ratings agency dropped the bonds from a BBB rating to a BBB-. The Indiana Finance Authority (IFA) issued the bonds in 2014 in the amount of $243.8 million. Proceeds from the sale of those bonds are helping finance the construction of Section 5 of I-69, which involves upgrading 21 miles of State Road 37 to interstate standards. The IFA selected I-69 Development Partners LLC as the developer of Section 5, and the company in turn hired Isolux Corsan as the construction contractor. In its statement, Fitch also noted that Isolux’s parent company, Spain-based Isolux Corsan SA, has had its own problems with deteriorating credit quality. Isolux Corsan SA is in the midst of a financial restructuring plan.

 

EDITOR FOOTNOTE: Joshua Claybourn is Counsel in Jackson Kelly’s Evansville office. He advises clients in matters of business and corporate law, governmental services, and public finance.
A native of Evansville, Mr. Claybourn is a graduate of the Indiana University Kelley School of Business and the Indiana University McKinney School of Law. He was recognized by Indiana Lawyer in its first statewide award as an “Up and Coming” lawyer. He is actively involved in the community and helps lead and support several civic and non‑profit organizations.

Learn more here.

READERS FORUM SEPTEMBER 21,2016

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WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

Todays READERS POLL question is: Do you agree with Dan McGinn, Mayor Winnecke and City Council that they should reduce the Homestead Property Tax Credit from 8 percent to 6 percent for 2017?

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.

Senate Watch: Sabato, WaPo Models Shift Forecasts Toward GOP

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Senate Watch: Sabato, WaPo Models Shift Forecasts Toward GOP

 by Guy Benson for TOWNHALL
Senate Watch: Sabato, WaPo Models Shift Forecasts Toward GOP

If you read this post, and the various analysesand updates that preceded it, these changesfrom political prognosticator Larry Sabato and the Washington Post won’t come as a surprise. The anti-Hillary movement in the presidential race — even as Trump faces a tall task — has been a boon to Senate Republicans’ fortunes. If Hillary wins, Democrats need to net four seats to regain the majority. If Trump wins, they’d need five. Either one is achievable, but the GOP has its own (widening) path to victory, too:

View image on Twitter

View image on Twitter
FOOTNOTE:  Sabato’s Crystal Ball moves four Senate race ratings—all in the direction of Republicans.
 Republicans are now favored to hold the Senate in@washingtonpost 2016 Senate race ratings http://wapo.st/2cOZ1ir  via@aaronblake
Photo published for Republicans are now favored to hold the Senate in our inaugural 2016 Senate race ratings
Republicans Are Now Favored To Hold The Senate In Our Inaugural 2016 Senate Race Ratings
Election years are fluid, so it would be foolish to bank on that map staying exactly the same for the next month-and-a-half.  But let’s say Arizona, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio and Florida all stay shaded red, while Colorado, Wisconsin and Illinois (where a new poll shows a fairly close contest) remain blue-ish.  That leaves pure toss-ups of Indiana, Pennsylvania, Nevada and New Hampshire.  Democrats would need to hold Harry Reid’s seat, then win two of the other three races to achieve a 50-50 upper chamber split. That’s doable, but hardly a lock. You know things aren’t going their way when Reid and company return to their perennial whining about money in politics — opprobrium that doesn’t apply to certain people’s money, of course. Even after Jeb Bush and friends  spent $130 million to win four delegates and a (funny!)  also-ran cameo at the
Emmys, this predictable and unevenly-applied attack persists:
The shift marks a dramatic reversal for Senate Democrats, who have gone from hoping for an anti-Trump-fueled electoral wave to insisting that their darkening poll numbers, dragged down by Clinton’s unpopularity, aren’t accurate. Senate Democrats also say a big fundraising haul for Republicans is to blame. “The big Republican donors that give dark money, the Koch brothers and all the rest of them, they’re panicky about Donald Trump, so they’re all in with Mitch McConnell and Republican senators,” Senator Claire McCaskill of Missouri said in an interview last week, referring to the Senate majority leader. “We don’t have as many of those types that have real huge money and can give lots of money. The ones that we have are also panicked about Donald Trump and they’re giving to Hillary Clinton.”
They just don’t have as many deep-pocketed interests spending lavishly to promote their candidates and agenda items, you see. Unless you include labor unions’ mega donations, alongside generous help from the Soros/Steyer/Bloomberg set. Democrats routinely out-raise and out-spend Republicans, both in victorious and losing cycles. It’s almost as if money isn’t the determinative factor they love to pretend it is. They wouldn’t want to lose their precious pretext for trying to repeal first amendment protections in pursuit of their partisan interests, after all.  I’ll leave you with new anti-Democrat attack ads from three of those four jump-ball races, plus another broadside against “phony Patrick Murphy” in Florida:

COA Reverses Judgment Against State Farm, Finds Trial Court Erred In Excluding Evidence

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COA Reverses Judgment Against State Farm, Finds Trial Court Erred In Excluding Evidence

by Olivia Covington for indianaLawer

The Indiana Court of Appeals reversed a judgment Tuesday against State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. after finding that a trial court erred in excluding evidence that could have proven the insurance company did not play a role in an accident that led to the plaintiff suffering from severe migraine headaches.

State Farm appealed in the case of State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company v. Sean Woodgett, 18A02-1505-CT-292, after the Delaware Circuit Court entered judgment in favor of Sean Woodgett for $85,000 against State Farm and Timmie Storms, whose vehicle struck Woodgett’s van from behind in September 2011, forcing the van to roll into the back of another vehicle. Woodgett had uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage at the time of the accident.

Woodgett was taken to the hospital and treated for neck pain and headaches. After undergoing physical therapy, Woodgett reported in February 2012 that his headaches were slight and came infrequently, but later began visiting a neurologist in 2013 for very severe headaches three to four times a week. The neurologist, Dr. Wuff, eventually diagnosed Woodgett with migraines.

Woodgett filed for damages against Storms and State Farm in 2013 and moved in the 2015 trial that State Farm be precluded from presenting evidence related to another accident Woodgett was involved in during the fall of 2012.

Counsel for State Farm alleged that Woodgett’s increasing headaches, which he first reported in January 2013, were related to the second accident in 2012. But the Delaware Circuit Court ruled that there was no medical evidence that directly spoke to the issues of the injury Woodgett suffered after the second accident and, thus, granted Woodgett’s motion, prompting State Farm’s appeal after the court entered judgment in favor of Woodgett.

In its reversal, the Court of Appeals wrote that a logical nexus existed between the second accident and the subsequent migraine headaches. That nexus was sufficient enough to show that the second accident was the possible cause of the migraines and, thus, that the trial court abused its discretion in excluding evidence of the second accident, the Court of Appeals wrote.

Further, the court wrote that the trial court’s error was inconsistent with substantial justice.

“This exclusion went to the heart of the matter that the jury was asked to decide – the extent to which Woodgett’s accident with Storms caused the headaches experienced by Woodgett and, in particular, the severe migraine headaches,” the Court of Appeals wrote.

The Court of Appeals remanded the case for further proceedings.

Catch the Latest Edition of “The Indiana State Police Road Show”

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Indiana - Catch the latest edition of the “Indiana State Police Road Show” radio program every Monday morning at your convenience.

This week’s show features retired Indiana State Police F/Sgt. and now current Posey County Sheriff, Greg Oeth. Sheriff Oeth discusses his participation in the Indiana Bicentennial Torch Relay and how he was selected for this honor.

Download the program from the Network Indiana public websites at www.networkindiana.com.  Look for the state police logo on the main page and follow the download instructions. The ISP Road Show can also be viewed via YouTube.

Go to https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCu5Bg1KjBd7H1GxgkuV3YJA or visit the Indiana State Police website at http://www.in.gov/isp/   and click on the YouTube link. This 15 minute talk show concentrates on public safety and informational topics with state wide interest.

The radio program was titled “Signal-10” in the early sixties when it was first started by two troopers in northern Indiana. The name was later changed to the “Indiana State Police Road Show” and is the longest continuously aired state police public service program in Indiana.

Radio stations across Indiana and the nation are invited to download and air for FREE this public service program sponsored by the Indiana State Police Alliance and Cops for Kids, a subsidiary of the Indiana State Police Alliance.