The Board of Commissioners of Vanderburgh County will hold an executive session on Thursday, May 23, 2024, at 8:00 a.m. in Room 305 of the Civic Center at One NW Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd., Evansville, Indiana 47708. The Board will meet pursuant to I.C. § 5-14-
1.5-6.1(b)(5) to receive information about and interview prospective employees.
WASHINGTON, PA – The Evansville Otters dropped the series opener today to the Washington Wild Things 10-3 at Wild Things Park.
It was back and forth early in the game, but the Wild Things (6-3) ran away with it in the third as the Otters’ (4-7) bats fell quiet.
Patrick Lee led off the game with a triple to left-center field. He was later brought in on an RBI fielder’s choice by Austin Bost to get Evansville on the board first.
Washington answered in the bottom of the inning before the Otters added another in the second. Blake Mozley, in his first professional at-bat, smoked a double down the left field line scoring Randy Bednar, making it a 2-1.
The fun ended there as the Wild Things strung together three runs in the second and third innings, taking a 7-2 lead, while the bats for the Otters had no response until late in the game.
Washington added on, scoring another run in the sixth and two in the seventh to take a 10-2 lead.
In the ninth inning, Bost led off with a double and later scored on a wild pitch, but it wasn’t enough as the scoring was finalized.
Braden Scott (0-3) started the game today for Evansville and took the loss. The southpaw went 2.2 innings, giving up seven runs on six hits with two walks and one strikeout.
Mozley led the way with two hits in his professional debut.
The Otters continue their three-game series against Washington tomorrow with a 5:05 PM CT first pitch.
The ability to communicate technical and regulatory requirements to key stakeholder groups, including patient and family, accurately and in a service oriented…
May respond to patient phone requests which have a scripted response from the physician or advanced practice provider; any medical/clinical questions that are…
In addition, the DSS may also be responsible for assisting in the kitchen or helping in an administrative position, such as answering the phone, typing, etc.
Must have valid driver’s license. Patient Safety Attendants provide supervision of critical care patients as delegated by a registered nurse and in cooperation…
Current state appropriate licensure as a Registered Nurse. The Clinical Practice RN (Registered Nurse) III is responsible for providing direct or indirect care…
Shall respond to calls for assistance by hospital staff, patients, visitors, and local law enforcement agencies. Visually checks for safety and fire hazards.
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Evansville freshman pitcher Kenton Deverman headlined a quartet of Purple Aces who earned all-Missouri Valley Conference honors on Monday night at the MVC Tournament banquet, as Deverman captured the league’s Freshman of the Year Award. He is the second Purple Ace to earn the honor, joining former UE standout Eric Stamets.
Deverman captured the MVC Freshman of the Year award and earned first-team all-Valley honors. He was joined on the MVC’s all-conference first team by graduate outfielder Mark Shallenberger. Senior outfielder Kip Fougerousse and senior pitcher Shane Harris both captured honorable mention all-MVC honors as well.
Deverman was named the Valley’s Freshman of the Year after going ranking fourth in the nation in victories among freshmen with seven, while leading the league in both ERA (3.53) and innings pitched (89.1). He went a perfect 5-0 in Valley play, and he left the mound with the lead in all nine MVC starts this year.
Shallenberger, meanwhile, earned first team all-Valley honors and was tied for second in the voting for MVC Player of the Year after ranking among the Valley’s top 10 in ten different offensive categories. Shallenberger will bring a team-best .382 batting average, 15 home runs and 55 RBI into this week’s MVC Tournament, which will be hosted at UE’s German American Bank Field at Charles H. Braun Stadium.
Fougerousse captured honorable mention all-MVC honors for a year in which he hit .336 with 18 doubles, 14 home runs and 49 RBI. It marks the second-straight year in which he was named all-MVC, as he earned first-team all-Valley honors last year at second base. Harris garnered honorable mention all-Valley honors after tying for third in the league with six victories, and ranking fourth overall with a 3.84 ERA. Harris held opposing batters to just a .236 batting average against, while striking out a career-high 60 men.
Evansville will bring a 31-23 overall record into this week’s MVC Tournament. The tournament will officially begin on Tuesday afternoon at German American Bank Field, as No. 5 UIC will battle No. 8 Missouri State at 2:30 p.m. and No. 6 Southern Illinois will square off with No. 7 Belmont at 6 p.m. UE’s MVC Tournament trek will begin on Wednesday morning at 9 a.m. against No. 4 Illinois State. Tickets for the MVC Tournament are available on-line at GoPurpleAces.com under the ticket link, or by phone by calling Logan Belz in the UE Athletic Ticket Office by phone at 812-488-2623.
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – The University of Evansville (UE) is elated to announce that Kyle ’15 and Ashley ’15 Freeland have generously contributed approximately $3 million to facilitate the establishment of a baseball clubhouse for the University which will be known as The Freeland Clubhouse. This is believed to be the largest gift in UE Athletics history. The Freeland’s philanthropic gesture will serve as the cornerstone for the initiation of the clubhouse project, a pivotal component of UE’s comprehensive athletics strategic plan, Pathway to Excellence.
Head Baseball Coach Wes Carroll has diligently cultivated a culture of excellence within UE’s baseball program. In a resounding testament to their unwavering support for Coach Carroll’s strategic vision for the future of UE Men’s Baseball, the Freeland’s have earmarked this gift for the construction of the new facility which will be situated close to the German American Bank Field at Charles H. Braun Stadium. The facility will include a locker room, offices for coaching staff, and space for a lounge. It is slated to be completed sometime in Summer 2025.
Kyle Freeland, a distinguished pitcher for the Colorado Rockies, honed his skills as a member of the UE Baseball team before being drafted in 2014. Meanwhile, his wife, Ashley Freeland, herself a former student-athlete at UE, attained her Bachelor of Science in Sport Management in 2015.
“It’s truly an honor for myself and my wife Ashley to be able to give back to the University of Evansville and support this baseball program into the future. I owe so much of my development as a baseball player and a person to my time at UE and Coach Wes Carroll, and this felt like the most fitting way for me to say thank you,” said Kyle Freeland ’15. “This program has built and sustained success for many years, and our goal with this gift to the baseball program is to help build on that momentum, create a team-oriented environment that helps Evansville baseball players realize their true potential as students and athletes, and continue to boost recruiting. We’re already excited to cut that ribbon and see the future of Purple Aces baseball.”
At a Monday morning press conference, Director of Athletics Dr. Kenneth “Ziggy” Siegfried said it was very clear that Coach Carroll made a difference in the life of Kyle Freeland and the family has decided to extend that influence by supporting future Aces.
“Aces Baseball is on the rise, and this transformational gift by Kyle and Ashley Freeland further accelerates our success in the Missouri Valley Conference and nationwide. I have always stated that we are a sleeping giant at the University of Evansville. A big part of that is the fact that we have Purple Aces like Kyle and Ashley Freeland who are willing to invest in our future,” said Dr. Siegfried. “I am so happy for Coach Wes Carroll and our UE Baseball program. Coach Carroll embodies what it means to be a Purple Ace. He has set the vision for the future of the UE Baseball program, and at the center of that vision has been a focus on our student-athletes.”
Attorney General Todd Rokita Warns Race Fans About Human Trafficking
May 21, 2024
As the Greatest Spectacle in Racing, the Indianapolis 500 is unparalleled as an international sporting event. Unfortunately, large events are known to create increased demand for trafficked individuals providing manual labor, sex for hire and other services. Attorney General Todd Rokita asks Hoosiers to know the signs, stay alert and report any suspicion to law enforcement.
“Spectator events of such grand scale are ripe for human traffickers looking for opportunities to carry out their heinous crimes,” Attorney General Rokita said. “As we excitedly participate in the greatest spectacle in racing, we need to keep our eyes and ears open for human trafficking as well. By reporting suspicions to local law enforcement, we can help authorities nab these predators and save victims.”
Following are signs that someone might be a victim of trafficking:
They appear submissive or fearful.
They are prohibited from speaking alone to strangers.
They give answers that appear to be scripted or rehearsed.
They show signs of physical abuse.
“Human traffickers can prey on anyone, regardless of their age, race or background,” Attorney General Rokita said. “It’s up to all of us to play a role in shutting down this devastating criminal enterprise.”
People in certain job roles — such as medical professionals, restaurant workers, and hotel employees — are particularly likely to come into contact with trafficking victims.
If you have suspicions that someone is being trafficked, call local law enforcement immediately. You may also report suspicions to the National Human Trafficking Hotline at 1-888-373-7888.
In addition to raising awareness, Attorney General Rokita and his team are engaged in other efforts to combat human trafficking.
The Office of the Attorney General operates the Address Confidentiality Program, which helps protect victims of certain crimes — including those who have been trafficked — by concealing their residential address from the public and thereby their victimizers. Learn more about the program at the Attorney General’s website.
In February, Attorney General Rokita announced all K-5 students in Indiana would receive a child ID kit in 2024 — free of charge to Indiana families. Child ID kits give parents a tool to provide detailed information, a photograph, fingerprint, and DNA to law enforcement quickly. Completed kits are kept in a safe place at home, out of a database, so parents are prepared if the unthinkable happens. Kits will be distributed by superintendents and school resource officers to students this fall.
As it happens, this year the Indianapolis 500 race weekend coincides with National Missing Children’s Day, which is May 25. The day is intended to encourage parents, guardians, and communities to make child safety a priority — and as a reminder to continue our efforts to reunite missing children with their families.
FOOTNOTE; THE CITY-COUNTY OBSERVER POSTED THIS ARTICLE WITHOUT OPINION. BIAS, OR EDITING.
Friday marks 100th anniversary of the Fighting Irish
Staff Report-STATEHOUSE FILES
WASHINGTON, D.C.—On Friday, U.S. Sen. Todd Young, R-Indiana, delivered remarks on the 100th anniversary of the confrontation known as Notre Dame vs. the KKK.
On Friday, U.S. Sen. Todd Young, R-Indiana, delivered remarks on the 100th anniversary of the confrontation known as Notre Dame vs. the KKK. Photo provided.
On May 17-19, 1924, the Ku Klux Klan rallied in South Bend with the intention of intimidating Catholics. During a three-day show of resistance, students from the University of Notre Dame confronted members of the KKK.
“It was 100 years ago this week—in an act of defiance against religious intolerance—that the Fighting Irish truly came into being. On this day, we remember their bravery in exercising their most basic of American freedoms as we celebrate the day they put the ‘fight’ in the University of Notre Dame Fighting Irish,” said Young, according to a press release.
Mr. President, 100 years ago this week, a legend was born.
One hundred years ago, the champions of religious freedom refused to back down in the face of intolerance and hate.
One hundred years ago today, the University of Notre Dame earned the moniker “the Fighting Irish.”
On May 17, 1924, thousands of members of the Indiana Chapter of the Ku Klux Klan gathered in South Bend, Indiana, for a rally called by their infamous leader, D.C. Stephenson.
The target that day for their despicable and misguided message of “true Americanism” was the Catholic institution of the University of Notre Dame, the young men who attended the university, and the Holy Cross priests who taught at it.
In the years that immediately preceded that fateful day, the KKK had watched with despair as Coach Knute Rockne and his football “Ramblers” had barnstormed across the country, winning praise for their fighting spirit and the university.
Mr. President, we can’t forget that, at the time, Catholics were a major target for the KKK in the Midwest.
And Notre Dame’s success on and off the field was an affront to the Klan’s false message of superiority.
And so, the KKK gathered outside the Golden Dome for what was to be a three-day rally, complete with a parade, speeches, dances … and no small amount of overtly violent intimidation.
They weren’t used to anyone standing up to them. They weren’t expecting anyone to stand up to them.
Little did they know that the mostly Irish Catholic student body across the street had no intention of being intimidated.
Little did they know that the students were so animated that the university president, Father Matthew Walsh, a World War I veteran, had been trying in vain to tell his students to stay safe and shelter in the school.
Little did the KKK know that on that day, the intended aspersion that the student body had co-opted as their preferred nickname—the Fighting Irish—was about to reach a national audience.
As the story goes—no doubt colored with some apocryphal additions over the years—the Klansmen began arriving in South Bend and hundreds of students marched out to meet them.
At first, the students almost playfully offered to assist the Klansmen in finding lodging and food, sometimes leading them down alleys, other times leading them back out of town.
However, when one KKK leader evidently became wise to the ruse and pointed a pistol at a student who had intended to pull down the unsacred cross of lights hung in a downtown third-floor window, well, as they say, all hell broke loose.
Klansmen that chose to fight quickly met their match and scrambled out of town.
Students grabbed produce—yes, even potatoes—from a local vegetable stand and hurled them at the cross, taking out all but the uppermost bulb.
At that moment, legendary “Four Horsemen” quarterback Harry Stuhldreher launched an impossible shot.
He threw a potato 40 feet in the air at the bulb, successfully darkening the last unholy light.
Moments later, the rest of the Klansmen were run out of town, tails between their legs. A subsequent exchange the next day led to another route by Notre Dame, running their record to 2-0 against the Klansmen that weekend.
That weekend, in describing the Notre Dame student body’s takedown of the most vaunted KKK chapter in the country, several national papers seized on the “Fighting Irish” moniker that had previously only been applied to the football team.
If you are interested in more details about that fateful weekend, Notre Dame alum Todd Tucker has written an acclaimed book entitled “Notre Dame vs. The Klan.”
Events like the one that took place in South Bend, Indiana, often prove to be historical inflection points.
In early 1924, intolerance and hatred were on the rise, not just in Indiana but across the country. For many, it was easier to give in to the fear of an uncertain future than to work to build a better community.
But Indiana and the country were soon to turn a corner, and the timing couldn’t have been more poetic.
Rockne, Stuhldreher, and the rest of the Fighting Irish football team would pull off a perfect 10-0 season later that year en route to the 1924 national championship.
And the Indiana Chapter of the KKK would quickly fizzle after the rape and murder conviction of its leader, D.C. Stephenson, the next year.
As for the university itself and its brave and proud student body: It would be three more years before Father Walsh would reluctantly give in to the wave that started that May day in 1924 and officialize the nickname—the Fighting Irish.
But make no mistake. It was 100 years ago this week—in an act of defiance against religious intolerance—that the Fighting Irish truly came into being.
And so, Mr. President, on this day, we remember their bravery in exercising their most basic of American freedoms as we celebrate the day they put the “fight” in the University of Notre Dame Fighting Irish.
INDIANAPOLIS – Governor Eric J. Holcomb today announced Superintendent James Durst will retire from the Indiana School for the Blind and Visually Impaired (ISBVI) effective September 30, after serving the ISBVI for 33 years in leadership roles.
“I’m so grateful for the decades Superintendent Durst spent as a dedicated educational leader serving Hoosiers who are blind and visually impaired as well as their families and wider communities,” said Gov. Holcomb. “In recent years, he prepared the Indiana School for the Blind and Visually Impaired for major upcoming capital improvements, including the eventual world class co-location of the Indiana School for Deaf on its campus.”
Durst was appointed Superintendent of the ISBVI in 2001 following 10 years of service as principal at the school. He also had over a decade of teaching and educational leadership in West Virginia.
As one of the largest state schools in the nation serving students who are blind or have low vision, IBSVI enrolls 110 students spanning preschool through high school, approximately 40 of whom are residential, as well as directly serving over 300 students across 46 school districts. The school offers a wide array of other programming aligned to its statutory mission of serving Hoosier students with visual disabilities.
During his tenure at the school, Durst was instrumental in the following accomplishments:
Reorganized and expanded the school’s Outreach Program, Short Course Program and summer programs and camps to serve hundreds of students across multiple school districts.
Completed numerous capital and technology projects on campus, including the complete renovation of the school’s 1920s era auditorium with the support of the Indiana Blind Children’s Foundation and Lilly Endowment, Inc.
The renaming of the school from the Indiana School for the Blind to the Indiana School for the Blind and Visually Impaired.
Implementation of the Unified English Braille code and proficiency requirements for teachers.
Served as president for two national organizations, the Council of Schools for the Blind and the Principals of Schools for the Blind.
Developing comprehensive strategic plans and the current five-year strategic plan through 2027.
Planning and preparation for the eventual co-location of the Indiana School for the Deaf on ISBVI’s campus, including the multiyear continuation of operations offsite beginning the 2024-2025 school year as the campus undergoes extensive renovations and construction.
Established a statewide prison braille program in collaboration with the Indiana Department of Correction to employ incarcerated adults at Miami Correctional Facility to transcribe and provide low-cost braille, large print, and accessible formats for school-age children.
“I would like to express my sincere gratitude for the support and collaboration you have provided to me and the school as board members,” said James Durst. “Our shared commitment to providing an outstanding education for the students at the Indiana School for the Blind and Visually Impaired has been the driving force behind our accomplishments.”