FOOTNOTE: EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
EVANSVILLE POLICE MERIT COMMISSION
MEETING AGENDA
Wednesday, April 10th, 2024
4:30 p.m. Room 307, Civic Center Complex
EXECUTIVE SESSION:
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – The University of Southern Indiana Women’s Tennis (7-10) fell to a talented Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (14-3) squad Sunday, 6-1. USI drops to 3-2 in the Ohio Valley Conference.
The Screaming Eagles celebrated senior day after the match for Rachel McCorkle (Tulsa, Oklahoma) and Lauren Rowe (Terre Haute, Indiana) who played pivotal roles in the past four years. The USI community congratulates the two on their achievements and looks forward to what the rest of the season holds.
Doubles
The Eagles dug themselves into a hole early in the match losing all three doubles competitions. Junior Madison Windham (Clarksville, Tennessee) and Rowe battled to the Cougars number doubles team to the end but fell just short.
Singles
USI was victorious in one of the six singles matches. Freshman Antonia Ferrarini (Caxias do Sul, Brazil) earned the lone victory clawing out a gritty 6-3, 3-6, 1-0 win in the singles three matchup.
What’s Next
Both the men’s and women’s Eagles are back at the USI Tennis courts on Saturday taking on Tennessee State University. The men start at 11 a.m. with the women following at 2:30 p.m.
Petrova and Grankina lead the individuals
TERRE HAUTE, Ind. – An impressive start to the Indiana State Invitational has the University of Evansville women’s golf team in the lead on the team side while Kate Petrova and Jane Grankina lead the individual standings at The Country Club of Terre Haute.
Petrova and Grankina each recorded scores of 71, one under the par of 72. The duo pace the individual standings as they are four in front of their nearest competition entering Monday’s final round.
Allison Enchelmayer is third for the Purple Aces and tied for 12th overall with a 79. Destynie Sheridan was one behind her with an 80 while Carly Frazier carded an 81. Sheridan and Frazier are tied for 16th and 20th, respectively.
Evansville’s team score finished at a 301, three in front of Purdue Fort Wayne. Indiana State is third with a 311. UE looks to keep the momentum going in Monday’s final 18 holes in Terre Haute.
UE in Tennessee on Monday
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Daniil Romashkin and Andres Rodriguez paced the University of Evansville men’s golf team on the final day of the Hoosier Collegiate at Pfau Course.
Romashkin posted a 78 in the third round after carding an 82 in round two. His final tally of 234 tied him for 58th place. Andres Rodriguez has the top effort in the final two rounds. After posting an 80 to complete the second round, he notched a 7-over 78 to finish the event with a 235. He tied for 63rd.
Caleb Wassmer was third for the Purple Aces and tied for 65th in the tournament with a 236. Wassmer carded a 76 in the opening round before identical scores of 80 in the final two rounds. Carson Parker completed the event with a 243 (T-81st) while Masatoyo Kato registered a 246 (85th). Parker’s low score was a 78 in the first round while Kato tallied a 76 in the first 18 holes.
Evansville came home in 14th place with a 945. They finished six in front of 15th-place Eastern Kentucky. Indiana took the team championship by 17 strokes over Notre Dame and Michigan State. The Hoosiers completed the three rounds with an 867. Edouard Cereto of Southern Illinois was the medalist with a 212.
UE is back on course Monday at the Big Blue Intercollegiate in Hermitage, Tenn.
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The moment the edge of the Moon appears to touch the edge of the Sun is called first contact. Apart from the few brief minutes or seconds of totality, eclipse glasses MUST ALWAYS be used for looking at the Sun.
©timeanddate/Perth Observatory
The eclipse progresses: one-quarter of the area of the Sun’s disk is now covered by the Moon.
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As the Moon continues to cover up the Sun, the amount of solar energy reaching the ground decreases, causing a drop in air temperature.
Shadow edges that are aligned with the Sun’s narrowing crescent start to become sharper; edges that lie at right angles to the Sun’s crescent shape remain more blurry.
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With around two-thirds of the Sun’s disk now covered by the Moon, the sky starts to become noticeably darker.
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Conditions on the ground and in the atmosphere continue to change as the amount of solar energy decreases—the Moon’s shadow can cause small changes in wind strength and direction.
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The surroundings start to darken, while colors begin to turn grayish; the Moon now eclipses more than three-quarters of the Sun’s disk.
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Night comes early: the behavior of animals and plants starts to be affected by falling levels of light.
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The Moon’s inner umbral shadow may become visible as it approaches from over the western horizon.
Faint waves of light—the result of turbulence in Earth’s atmosphere—may be seen moving across the ground and walls.
©timeanddate/MIT-NASA Eclipse Expedition
The solar corona—the outer part of the Sun’s atmosphere, normally hidden from view—starts to become visible.
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The Moon’s umbral shadow sweeps in from a western direction and envelops the surroundings.
©timeanddate/MIT-NASA Eclipse Expedition
The solar corona forms a ring around the dark Moon, while the remaining sliver of sunlight dazzles like a jewel. Eclipse glasses MUST be kept on for observing the diamond ring and the Baily’s beads that follow.
©timeanddate/MIT-NASA Eclipse Expedition
Just before totality, the final beads of sunlight stream through valleys along the edge of the Moon.
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The moment the edge of the Moon covers all of the Sun is called second contact. At this point—when the Sun’s disk is completely covered—eclipse glasses should be removed.
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The chromosphere—a thin, red layer of the Sun’s atmosphere—may be visible for the first few seconds after totality begins.
©timeanddate/MIT-NASA Eclipse Expedition
Reddish, tongue-like prominences may poke out from the Sun during totality; these structures are supported by magnetic fields in the solar corona.
©Anne Buckle/timeanddate
It doesn’t get completely dark during totality: the ghostly solar corona shines as brightly as a Full Moon.
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Stars and planets—including Mercury and Venus—may be visible in the darkened sky.
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Colorful skies may be visible in the far distance, around the edge of the Moon’s umbral shadow.
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The deepest point of the eclipse, when the Sun is at its most hidden behind the Moon. This is roughly the halfway point: the features of the eclipse now repeat in reverse order.
It is important to know how long totality lasts at a particular location. Before the outer edge of the Sun reappears at the end of totality, eclipse glasses MUST be put back on.
In the final few seconds before the end of totality, the chromosphere may briefly become visible again.
The moment the edge of the Moon exposes the Sun is called third contact. The eclipse switches from being total back to partial.
©timeanddate/MIT-NASA Eclipse Expedition
A new set of Baily’s beads appears along the edge of the Moon, signaling the start of the second partial phase of the eclipse.
These faint waves of light may reappear for a minute or so, rippling along the ground and walls.
©timeanddate/MIT-NASA Eclipse Expedition
Baily’s beads come together to form another dazzling jewel of sunlight, with the solar corona again forming a ring around the Moon.
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The Moon’s umbral shadow sweeps out, heading toward the horizon in an eastern direction.
The ring of the corona around the Moon disappears from view—the next opportunity to see it will be the next total solar eclipse.
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The Moon’s umbral shadow may be visible in the distance as it retreats over the eastern horizon.
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Night turns to day once again: animals and plants are going back to their usual patterns of behavior.
The conditions of the sky and surroundings are returning to normal; temperature changes are delayed slightly by an effect called thermal lag.
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With around half an hour to go until the eclipse reaches its end, one-quarter of the Sun’s disk remains covered by the Moon.
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The moment the edge of the Moon leaves the edge of the Sun is called fourth contact. Although the eclipse has finished at this location, the Moon’s shadow continues to travel across the globe from west to east.
IS IT TRUE every time an elected body ignores the will of the people it comes back to bite them on the backside?
IS IT TRUE that we are told that the recent Vanderburgh County Republican Party Lincoln Day Dinner was well attended by a broad cross-section of party members? …that old grudges and new rivalries were apparent with hard stares were seen across the room?
IS IT TRUE that we have been told that two candidates for governor were in attendance at the recent GOP Lincoln Day Dinner? …that when the Vanderburgh GOP Chairmen Mike Duckworth introduced Lt. Governor Suzanne Crouch as “the next Governor of the State Of Indiana” it upset several GOP members working for other candidates for Governor? …that it is obvious Chairman Duckworth continues to cause unnecessary friction and divide within the local GOP?
IS IT TRUE that many of the candidates running for the 8th district congressional seat would love to be endorsed by former president Donald Trump? …that in their stump speeches and advertising materials they tout their relationships with Trump? …that over the weekend a PAC Committee posted on social media that Congressional candidate Mark Messmer (R) was endorsed by Donald Trump? …that as soon as the endorsement claim was proven untrue, the post disappeared?
IS IT TRUE that the City-County Observer newspaper is a proud supporter of our law enforcement?
IS IT TRUE that everyone has a right to their opinions even if they are wrong?
IS IT TRUE that we would like to give five (5) cheers to members of the EXPLORE EVANSVILLE Board Of Directors and their talented staff for doing an incredible job in staging today’s ECLIPE event?
IS IT TRUE when the people fear the Government we have Tyranny? …when the Government fears the people we have liberty?
IS IT TRUE our “READERS POLLS” are non-scientific but trendy?
FOOTNOTE: The CCO staff would like to thank the many friends for their prayers and words of encouragement for our publisher’s speedy recovery.
Ron recently sustained a life-threatening fall which landed him in a local trauma facility for 30 days. He sustained a traumatic brain injury with required 46 staples and stitches and 5 units of blood. He is now at home resting and receiving Rehab 2 times a day for 3 days a week.
We would give special thanks to Ron’s wife Marilyn and family members for the strong support and love they gave him during his serious medical crisis.
Marilyn has also managed the publishing of our online, mobile sight, and monthly printed paper and is doing an outstanding job.
Evansville Mayor Stephanie Terry will deliver her first State of the City address, “The First 100 Days,” on Tuesday, April 9, 2024 at 12:00 p.m.
Mayor Terry will give the speech in the Riverfront Event Center at Bally’s, as part of the weekly meeting of the Rotary Club of Evansville. Members of the public are welcome to attend at no cost; standalone seating will be set up in the back of the room for those who wish to hear the speech without eating the Rotary lunch. Those wishing to eat lunch can purchase those tickets through the Rotary Club.