Home Blog Page 5592

APRIL BIRTHDAY

0
THIS MONTH BIRTHDAYS

DAVE HUFFMAN

Matt Happe

Ashley Renea

Eric Gill

Melody R Overton

                                                                              Matt Happe

MARY ELLEN COKER

STEVE HILL

BRANDON CAMPBELL

MELISSA NAKER REYNOLDS

TERRY WHITE

DAVID COSBY

JONATHAN BAKER

VICKI BRASEL

PATTI KNIGHT SILKE

MIKE BALL

JEFFREY WISEMAN

JOE TOWNSEND

KATIE FELKER

LLAURA SHAFER

MARK L. HEITKEMPER

LISA BELL

ALAN LEIBUNDGUTH

PEGGY WALTERS

CARRIE ELPERS

DAVID COSBY

SCHELL BAGGETT

MICHELLE NORTHERNER

ROBIN HAPPE

MICHAEL EGGLESTON

JODY ALVERSON

TAMMY M HARGRAVE

ASHLEY BROWN

JON TOWNSEND

FOOTNOTE: If you would like to announce someones Birthday please forward the name to City-County Observer@live.com. One lucky person whose name appears in the April, 2016 CCO Birthday post will be eligible for prize. Each week the CCO will draw the name of one person celebrating their birthday for the Month of April and the winner will receive a copy of six time Olympic Qualifier and World Record holder for the 5000 meter Anne Audian. Her book is entitled “UNCOMMON HEART.” The drawing will be held each Friday and announced on the following Monday. The retail value of Anne’s book is around $20.

Adopt A Pet

0

Josie is a solid white cat of about 3 years old. She loves all people, including children, and gets along well with other cats. Her sister Layla (also white) is up for adoption, too! Adopt Josie for only $30 and she goes home spayed, microchipped, vaccinated, and FeLV/FIV tested. Call (812) 426-2563 or visit www.vhslifesaver.org for adoption details!

Governor Pence Announces Statewide Robotics Program for Elementary School Students

0

 

Indianapolis – Governor Mike Pence and Indiana Department of Workforce Development (DWD) Commissioner Steven J. Braun today announced a new partnership with TechPoint Foundation for Youth (TPF4Y) which will allow elementary schools across the state the opportunity to receive free robotics kits to use for afterschool programs. This partnership, which also includes VEX Robotics, NASA, Project Lead The Way (PLTW) and the REC Foundation, will introduce Hoosier fourth and fifth grade students to science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) via a first-of-its-kind robotics program for elementary school students.

“Introducing students to STEM in elementary school has a positive impact on academic performance, and increases the likelihood that they will consider pursuing STEM degrees and careers,” said Governor Pence. “This innovative program will engage thousands of young Hoosiers in STEM education and inspire our state’s science and industry leaders of tomorrow.”

All public and private elementary schools in Indiana are eligible to apply, and 400 schools will be selected for participation during the inaugural year of the program (2016-2017 school year), with an additional 400 schools being selected during the 2017-2018 school year.

“We are thrilled to be a part of this exciting opportunity to expose more young Hoosiers to the hands-on learning that robotics programming provides,” said Laura Dodds, Executive Director of TPF4Y. “The Governor’s commitment to building the STEM workforce pipeline is a real investment in our workforce of tomorrow and enables educators to prepare students for the state’s current and future in-demand jobs.”

The new statewide program builds upon the successful IndyVRC program. IndyVRC was established in 2013, under the guidance of former Indianapolis Mayor Greg Ballard, and sought to expose more Indianapolis high school students to STEM education. Due to the success of the robotics programs in Marion County, DWD and TPF4Y are confident this model can be replicated and scaled to serve elementary school students statewide.

“Indiana DWD was eager to partner with these visionaries in the STEM world,” said Commissioner Steven J. Braun.  “The program will help to create a comprehensive STEM program that will inspire the next generation of Hoosier innovators. As someone who comes from the tech sector, I am thrilled to see Hoosier students being introduced to STEM in new and unique ways.  It is not only vital to the future of our state and our workforce, but also expands the futures of these young Hoosiers.”

Utilizing funding appropriated by the General Assembly for innovations in career and technical education and workforce development, the goal of the program is to build top-notch STEM programs across the state that excite and inspire students to pursue high-wage, high-demand career paths in STEM fields.

For more information on the application process, please contact George Giltner atgeorge@techpointyouth.org.

ERM’s 13th Annual Golf Scramble

0
So far, nearly 150 Tri-State children have signed up to attend our Summer Camp program at Camp Reveal. We don’t want families having to worry about finances, so we offer our Summer Camp program for free.

That being said, it does cost the ERM about $150 to send a Tri-State child to Summer Camp. To help offset these costs, your ERM organizes an annual golf scramble fundraiser.

Our 13th annual golf scramble will take place on Monday, May 9th at Rolling Hills Country Club in Newburgh.

To help support your Evansville Rescue Mission’s Summer Camp program, would you consider being a Green Sponsor ($100 level)?

Uber drivers’ $100M deal may set pace for gig economy

0

IL for www.theindianalawyer.com

cUber Technologies Inc. resolved the biggest threat to its business by settling with California drivers suing to be treated more like traditional employees, a move that could have broad-ranging implications for companies across the sharing economy.

The agreement calls for Uber to pay as much as $100 million to drivers in California and Massachusetts and allows them to solicit tips from riders, but keeps them classified as contract workers instead of formal employees, according to statements by a lawyer for the drivers and the company.

With a valuation of $62.5 billion, Uber is the biggest firm in the sharing economy where a fight has been brewing over how companies classify workers. The settlement could guide other companies in the gig economy trying to address worker unrest.

The definitions of employees and contractors have grown blurry in the sharing economy, which is caught in a hazy zone of laws and regulations written decades ago. Worker advocates remain divided over whether those who labor in the app-enabled casual workforce demand a new legal category. The California drivers’ lawsuit was one of the biggest and most advanced challenges to Uber’s ride-sharing business model, which is still under attack worldwide by the taxi industry, local governments, unions and even passengers.

“Uber avoids the collision and an adverse finding that these folks are employees,” James Evans, a lawyer who defends companies against employment suits, said about Uber’s efforts to settle the matter. “They leave it an open issue, and that’s desirable from their standpoint. This maintains the status quo, without figuring out if these people should be treated differently or not.”

The class-action lawsuit, set for trial June 20 in San Francisco, had grown to cover about 240,000 current and former Uber drivers in California over claims they were wrongly classified as independent contractors and should be reimbursed for expenses and tips. Those claims under state law would have totaled hundreds of millions of dollars if the world’s biggest ride-hailing service lost at trial. Additional penalties against the company might have added several hundred-million dollars more to the cost of a losing verdict.

Under the agreement filed Thursday, which requires court approval, Uber will initially pay $84 million to the drivers, with another $16 million contingent on Uber’s valuation continuing to grow in coming years, according to driver attorney Shannon Liss-Riordan’s statement. A quarter of the payout will go toward attorney fees, according to Liss-Riordan.

USI’s Pence earns provisional mark at Bellarmine

0

University of Southern Indiana Men’s Track & Field senior Tyler Pence (Springfield, Illinois) posted a strong NCAA Division II provisional mark in the 5,000 meters Saturday at the Bellarmine Classic.

Pence finished first in the event with a season-best time of 14 minutes, 8.98 seconds, a mark that ranks 13th, nationally.

The first-place finish was one of 10 top-five finishes for the No. 23 Screaming Eagles. Joining Pence with a first-place finish was junior Chase Broughton (Marengo, Indiana), who posted the top time in the 1,500 meters. Fellow classmate Marius Ulrich (Wesseling, Germany) was fourth in the 1,500 meters, while senior Johnnie Guy (Palmyra, Indiana) was fifth in the same event.

Junior Jace Hartz (Evansville, Indiana) posted a third-place effort in the high jump, while sophomores James Cecil (Owensboro, Kentucky) and Logan Paris(Wabash, Indiana) posted third-place finishes in the 3,000-meter steeplechase and javelin, respectively. Hartz also was fourth in the javelin, while junior Micheal Hammonds (Evansville, Indiana) was fourth in the hammer throw.

Freshman DeAvion Sullivan (Evansville, Indiana) rounded out the Eagles’ top-five efforts with a fifth-place showing in the 400 meters. Sullivan’s time of 49.69 seconds ranks third all-time at USI.

USI returns to action April 29-30 when it competes at the Hillsdale “Gina” Relays in Hillsdale, Michigan. Guy also will compete at the Payton Jordan Invitational in Stanford, California, May 1.

USI’s Roberts, Duty earn first-place finishes at Bellarmine

0

University of Southern Indiana Women’s Track & Field sophomores Emily Roberts (Fredericktown, Ohio) and Kate Duty (Owensboro, Kentucky) recorded first-place finishes to lead the Screaming Eagles at the Bellarmine Classic Saturday.

Roberts finished first in the 1,500 meters with an NCAA Division II provisional qualifying time of four minutes, 32.24 seconds, while Duty was first in the steeplechase with a time of 11:18.96. Roberts’ time ranks third all-time at USI in the 1,500 meters.

Including their first-place finishes, the Eagles racked up eight top-five efforts on the day. Senior Kaylen White (Clarks Hills, Indiana) was second in the 400-meter hurdles with a school-record time of 1:05.02, while seniors Jamie Adkins (Owensboro, Kentucky) and Jordan Jones (Bargersville, Indiana) posted third-place finishes in the 1,500 meters and javelin, respectively.

Sophomore Jessica Lincoln (Palatine, Illinois) was fourth in the steeplechase, while junior Jenna Martin (Evansville, Indiana) and freshman Kate Henrickson(Boonville, Indiana) posted fifth-place finishes in the long jump and 800 meters, respectively.

Freshman Hilary Paxson (Liberty City, Indiana) also turned out a notable performance as she broke the program’s record in the hammer throw with her sixth-place toss of 142 feet, six inches.

USI returns to action April 29-30 when it competes at the Hillsdale “Gina” Relays in Hillsdale, Michigan.

 

SANDERS STILL WON’T ADMIT HE WAS ‘BERNED’ IN NEW YORK

0

By Rick Jensen

As expected, “Crooked Hillary” and “Short Fingers Trump” won the New York primary.

Unexpectedly, “Bernie’s Boys and Babes” have cried foul over the purging of the voter rolls, intimating that some nefarious evil has wiped over 125,000 would-be Bernie voters from the lists of eligible voters.

The Brennan Center for Justice in New York has done quite a bit of research on voter roll purging, saying it’s “shrouded in secrecy, prone to error, and vulnerable to manipulation.”

“Purges, if done properly, are an important way to ensure that voter rolls are dependable, accurate, and up-to-date. Precise and carefully conducted purges can remove duplicate names, and people who have moved, died, or are otherwise ineligible.”

Far too frequently, however, eligible, registered citizens show up to vote and discover their names have been removed from the voter lists.

Learning that about 126,000 Democratic voters have been stripped from the rolls, the Sanders campaign cried foul.

“From long lines and dramatic understaffing to longtime voters being forced to cast affidavit ballots and thousands of registered New Yorkers being dropped from the rolls, what’s happening today is a disgrace,” Sanders spokesman Karthik Ganapathy said in an email to CNN, calling the difficulties a “shameful demonstration.”

Speaking to CNN on Tuesday night, Board of Elections Executive Director Michael Ryan pushed back against the growing criticism, saying, “We’re not finding that there were issues throughout the city that are any different than what we experience in other elections.”

At the time of this writing, the Clinton campaign has ignored requests for comments. Nothing to see here. Move along.

What’s amusing this time around is that Democrats usually use the systematic updating of voter rolls to accuse Republicans of illegally erasing the names of Democrats from the rolls and using that accusation to elicit more campaign donations to fight the “evil Republicans.”

This time, Hillary is being portrayed as the unnamed villain.

When election officials cannot verify the names and addresses, the names come off the rolls. When those people show up, their vote is recorded on the condition that their eligibility is then verified later.

As explained by the Board of Elections, Of the 126,000 Democratic voters taken off from the rolls in Brooklyn, Ryan said 12,000 had moved out of borough, while 44,000 more had been placed in an inactive file after mailings to their homes bounced back. An additional 70,000 were already inactive and, having failed to vote in two successive federal elections or respond to cancel notices, were removed.

The Sanders swarm will NOT accept this. The fix is in! The rascally Republicans … er… Democrats are obviously out to get those… Democrats?

So here we are in New York, where Democrats are yelling and screaming about “voter suppression” as they do when Republicans emulate Nelson Mandela by calling for voter ID’s.

Still, there must be some right-wing evil-doing in all of this voter suppression, right?

There are three Republicans on the New York City Council. Three.

That leaves 41 Democrats. Obviously, those three Republicans stymie all the good that the Democrats want to achieve and likely snuck into the Board of Elections offices to steal the names of those 126,000 Democrats.

But the complaints came from Brooklyn! Surely that is where the Republicans stole the names, right?

Brooklyn has 16 members in power and they are all Democrats.

Maybe Republican Minority Leader Stephen Mateo swam over from Staten Island and did the dirty deed?

Of course! And he led the five Republican members of the Board of Elections in the purge, slipping by the five Democrats on the board!

Either that, or the purge is actually quite common and readily fixed at the polling places.

Wait! No! Blame “Crooked Hillary”!

That’s not too far-fetched, is it?

——-

Softball scores two in the 7th to defeat Indiana State, 6-5

0

Aces head back to Evansville for final four home games

Michal Luckett finished with two hits and a pair of RBIs while Chandra Parr hit her sixth home run of the season to lead the University of Evansville softball team to a come-from-behind 6-5 win on Sunday at Price Field.

Evansville (22-21, 10-10 MVC) is on a streak that has seen them take wins in five of the last six games and 8 out of 10 overall.  In the circle, Morgan Florey picked up her 15th victory of the season as she threw the final two innings, taking over for starter Emily Lockhart

This week, the Aces wrap up their home schedule, playing Southern Illinois in a single game on Tuesday at 5 p.m. before welcoming Missouri State to Cooper Stadium for a 3-game weekend set.

“Positions 4-8 in the conference are still up for grabs.  Having these next four in a row at home is huge,” UE head coach Mat Mundell said.  “It is going to be great to play in front of the home crowd.  Evansville has an exciting team to watch.”

Chandra Parr led the game off with a home run as the Aces scored four runs off of Indiana State (14-29, 8-10 MVC) starter Taylor Lockwood.  Two quick outs followed Parr’s blast before the UE offense strung together four hits in a row.  Morgan Lambert and Hayli Scott each singled to bring Luckett to the plate.  She responded, doubling to center to score Lambert and Scott.  Susan Norris laced another double to left-center to bring home Luckett.

The Sycamores scored a pair of runs in both the first and third innings before taking their first lead in the 4th as Erika Crissman hit a solo shot to center.

Things remained that way until the game entered the seventh wi9th the Aces down to their final three outs.  Tess Hupe started the inning off with a single before Parr reached on a fielder’s choice with Hupe out on the play.  Next up was Courtney Land, who singled.  An ISU error in centerfield allowed Parr to score the tying run.  Great base running by Land saw her advance all the way to third in the sequence.  That gave the next opportunity to Florey, who hit a sacrifice fly to left, bringing home what would be the game-winning run.

Luckett, Scott and Lambert each had two hits on the day as the Aces plated six runs on 12 hits.  Lockwood pitched all seven innings for ISU, giving up the six runs, four of which were earned.  Lockhart made the start for UE, going three innings while allowing four runs.  Florey went the final four innings and gave up just one run on two hits.

USI BB salvages a split on Sunday

0

The University of Southern Indiana baseball team bounced back in the nightcap to earn a doubleheader split with Lewis University Sunday afternoon at the USI Baseball Field. The Screaming Eagles lost the opener, 9-8, in eight innings, before salvaging the nightcap, 6-1.

USI saw its record go to 25-16 overall and 13-7 in the Great Lakes Valley Conference, while Lewis finished the day 22-17 overall, 11-9 GLVC.

Eagles’ freshman right-hander Austin Krizan (Mt. Vernon, Indiana) was dominating in nightcap to lead USI to the 6-1 win. Krizan (4-0) won his fourth game and posted his third complete game of the year, allowing one run on seven hits and one walk in seven innings of work. He also struck out three batters.

The Eagles provided Krizan all of the offense he would need in the first two innings of nightcap with USI pushing across five runs in the first and one tally in the second inning to build a 6-0 lead. Krizan surrendered his only run of the day in the sixth before shutting the door on the 6-1 win .

Senior first baseman Andrew Cope (Evansville, Indiana) led the Eagles at the plate with a pair of hits, including a two-single in the first inning rally. Sophomore second baseman Sam Griggs (Evansville, Indiana) also had a pair of hits with a run scored and one RBI.

USI could not hold onto a 6-3 lead after five innings and lost game one 9-8 in the eighth inning of the seven-inning game one. USI, which spotted Lewis a 3-0 lead in the opening frame, scored two in the first, third, and fifth to take a 6-3 lead before Lewis rallied with four runs in the sixth to take back the lead, 7-6.

Battling back with a pair of runs in the bottom of sixth, the Eagles briefly regained the lead, 8-7, only to see the Flyers tie the game in the top of the seventh, 8-8, to send the game into an extra frame. Lewis scored the game winner in the top of the eighth for the 9-8 victory off of USI senior right-handers Alex Holder (Princeton, Indiana) and T.J. Decker (Brazil, Indiana).

Holder (3-5) picked up the loss after walking the eventual game-winning run to lead off the eighth. Decker finished the eighth allowing one hit to load the bases and a fielder’s choice that drove in the game-winning run.

Junior right-hander Devin Williams (Evansville, Indiana) started and got the no-decision after allowing seven runs, four earned, on seven hits in 5.2 innings of work. He also struck out five in the first half of the game.

USI sophomore designated hitter Joe Redburn (Newburgh, Indiana) and senior third baseman Trent Gunn (Tell City, Indiana) led the Eagles at the plate in the opener. Redburn had three hits and five RBIs, while Gunn had three hits, three runs scored, and one RBI.

The Eagles continues their 10-game homestand Wednesday at 6 p.m. when they host the University of Missouri-St. Louis for non-conference match-up at the USI Baseball Field. Live coverage of Wednesday’s game can be found on GoUSIEagles.com.

USI holds a 49-42 lead over the Tritons all-time after dropping an 8-1 decision April 5 in St. Louis. The Tritons are 24-16 overall after dropping a doubleheader on the road at Truman State University Sunday.

During Wednesday’s USI-UMSL game, Hucks will be giving away a $500 USI Bookstore certificate to a lucky USI student. Students must have a valid USI student ID and be present at the start of the baseball game to be entered in the drawing.

 

NOTE: USI senior rightfielder Kyle Kempf (Evansville, Indiana) ends the weekend one hit short of tying the USI career-record for hits. The record of 270 is held by Mike Peerman (1997-2000).